New York police have been recruiting for informants in holding facilities for immigrants, most of them Muslims, aiming to “talk them” into spying on their own community in cafes, restaurants and mosques, documents obtained by The New York Times show.

Less than a month has passed since the highly publicized
announcement that the NYPD has disbanded its highly controversial
Zone Assessment Unit, or as it is known to the city’s Muslim
community, the Demographics Unit.
However, the recruitment of immigrants to eavesdrop on
conversations in Muslim neighborhoods shows no signs of easing,
according to a New York Times article, which says 220 such
recruitment attempts were made in the first quarter of this year
alone by a unit known as the Citywide Debriefing Team.

“Are you a Muslim?”

“Which Mosque do you go to?”

“How do you celebrate Muslim holidays?”

“Have you been to Mecca?”

“Are any of your friends radicals?”

“Where do the Somalia immigrants tend to gather?”

“Al Qaeda, do you know these people?”

These are just some of the interview questions posed to members
of the Muslim community waiting to be arraigned in a lockup
facility after minor infractions. The Times article points to a
few such episodes. An immigrant from Afghanistan was asked to act
as a stool pigeon in Muslim cafes, restaurants and mosques
following his arrest over an argument with a traffic police
officer. A similar proposal was made to a student from Pakistan
who was placed in a cell for driving without a valid license.

Religion-based profiling has become a normal occurrence at the
NYPD, which continues to generate data on Muslims’ praying,
eating and shopping habits. The source seems to be irrelevant as,
the Citywide Debriefing Team aims to recruit Muslims, regardless
of what they know or how distant they are from actual terrorist
activity.

Such fishing expeditions are usually conducted during
interrogations or “non-coercive sessions” as one police
officer put it. However, regardless of how the recruitment
process is branded, the subjects have come out shaken and
disturbed from such encounters, feeling they had little choice
but to cooperate.

NYPD informant recruiters filed daily detailed reports about
Muslims in detention. Some of their subjects were pushed so far
into a corner they were ready to say anything to be freed. Here’s
an excerpt from a report on the recruitment of Bayjan Abrahimi, a
food cart vendor from Afghanistan, quoted by The New York Times.

Detective writes: “He spent his ‘free time in a library
reading and learning English. Mr. Abrahimi agreed to provide
detectives with the overseas phone number of his brother, the
taxi driver. Subject believes other family members would
help if asked. Mr. Abrahimi is willing, if the Police Department
requests, “to attend services at other locations and
travel.”
The officer’s report concludes that Mr. Abrahimi is “suitable
for assignments locally and outside the city” and described
him as showing “high potential to be used as an asset.”

Just last month, the NYPD disbanded another clandestine unit of
plainclothes detectives, called the Demographics Unit, which ran
detailed, invasive spying operations targeting the city’s Muslim
communities. The fruits of that labor led to multiple legal
challenges and outrage among citizens, especially the targeted
communities already under scrutiny following the September 11,
2001 attacks.